Growing Carrot

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09 Feb 11 adam (Australia - cool/mountain climate)
I grow carrots really successfully every year, twice a year. We don't have Carrot Fly in Australia, as far as I know.Carrots fork a lot when grown in freshly manured or fertilised soil. I grow them about 15 cm apart, the rows that is. I water the soil after raking it even. Then sow the carrots, and then put old fence palings over them and press them down a bit to get the seeds in contact with the soil. If it's sunny, I water the boards lightly every day for a few days, just to keep them moist. This is the trick to germinating the seeds. After a few days, between four and seven, Icheck by lifting up a board. If you see little green shoots that look like new grass, in the area you sowed the seeds, then you have germinated. I then lift the boards up about two inches or so, and put little bits of something under the boards at the ends to keep them there foe a few more days, to protect the new carrots from excess heat. After that, I just take the boards away, and I seem to get very good germination with this method. Carrots don't have a hard growing tip, so if they have to struggle growing down, they will twist and get weird shapes. Parsnips DO have a very strong growing tip, so I plant them together to get the soil opened up for the carrots. Hope this helps. Cheers.
07 Mar 11 Annerliegh (Australia - temperate climate)
That trick with the parsnips is clever.
14 Apr 11 Paul (Australia - temperate climate)
on this site it says to avoid sowing carrots and parsnips together?
02 Dec 11 Nathan (Australia - cool/mountain climate)
I suspect you would plant parsnips at the start of the season, then sows carrots once the parsnips are done. giving you 2 crops from the same piece of soil, pulling the parsnips would make turning the soil easier before planting the carrots. (Unless this is considered a no-no as well?)
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